Strengthening intersectoral cooperation for control and integrated surveillance of rabies in Uganda: A multistakeholder engagement workshop
Title (eng)
Strengthening intersectoral cooperation for control and integrated surveillance of rabies in Uganda: A multistakeholder engagement workshop
Author
Rabina Ghimire
Samuel George Okech
Anna S. Fahrion
Terence Odoch
Jan Matern
Tina Bohnes
Nathalie J. Vielle
Mathew Muturi
Johanna Pauline Wiethoff
Maria Flavia Nakanjako
Frederic Lohr
Prahors Ung
Chheng Tann
Simon Peter Alubbe
Anna Rose Ademun
John Opolot
Fred Monje
Judith Nanyondo Semanda
Dickson Akankwatsa
Lilian Wambua
Salome Dürr
Abstract (eng)
Rabies is a prioritized zoonotic disease and significant public health threat in Uganda. Despite Uganda's commitment to the global “Zero-by-30” goal and a validated National Rabies Elimination Strategy (NRES), implementation has been hindered by fragmented surveillance, limited intersectoral coordination, and lack of operationalization of control plans. To address these challenges, a participatory multisectoral workshop was conducted by the Schnell Einsetzbare Expertengruppe Gesundheit and eRabies project team, in collaboration with Makerere University, the Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries (MAAIF), and the Ministry of Health (MOH). The workshop brought together 49 participants from national, subnational, and international institutions to strengthen intersectoral cooperation, assess NRES implementation, and define next immediate steps for rabies control. The primary output was a structured SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) analysis of NRES implementation, across four thematic areas: Governance, Coordination, and Risk Communication; Rabies Prevention and Control; Field and Laboratory Surveillance and Data Management, and Training and Operational Research. Insights from the SWOT analysis informed a one-year log frame outlining 10 prioritized objectives and 26 targeted activities, each linked to success indicators and timelines. Early follow-up actions included piloting a digital application for integrated bite case management in four selected districts, specialized rabies diagnostic training, a national rabies research scoping review, and targeted mass dog vaccination campaigns. Despite these advancements, broader implementation of the plan remains inconsistent. Over a year later, activities such as vaccination coverage assessment, post-exposure prophylaxis procurement and distribution, and sustained community engagement have not progressed beyond planning or lack documentation. Sustained political commitment, dedicated financing, and strengthened coordination at both national and subnational levels are critical to overcome existing challenges and ensure initial momentum translates into lasting impact. The workshop outputs offer a practical, stakeholder-driven framework to guide national priorities, aligned with the NRES and goal of rabies elimination in Uganda.
Keywords (eng)
One HealthParticipatorySurveillanceNational rabies Elimination StrategySWOT Analysis
Type (eng)
Language
[eng]
Persistent identifier
Is in series
Title (eng)
One Health
Volume
21
ISSN
2352-7714
Issued
2025
Number of pages
10
Publication
Elsevier
Version type (eng)
Date issued
2025
Access rights (eng)
License
Rights statement (eng)
© 2025 The Authors
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https://phaidra.vetmeduni.ac.at/o:4998 - Other links and identifiers
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- RightsLicenseRights statement© 2025 The Authors
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